I read in Readers Digest a long time ago that it was a Native American saying about snow conditions but I remember it as "sticky no sticky no sticky sticky". And meaning if the snow is sticky and can be made into a snowball it won't be around long, and if it is not sticky, not able to be made into a snowball, it will be around for awhile.
The sticky note is stick because the people who make the sticky note make it sticky on the back so they will stick to stuff like desk, walls, ect...
Yes, glycerine is sticky
they take plastic and on the non-sticky side they glue on sticky-back-plastic
Yes, -sticky is the analogy for glue.
Take a sample to a lab and get an analysis to see WHY it is "sticky"Take a sample to a lab and get an analysis to see WHY it is "sticky"
yes it is a sticky note.People use the phrase sticky for a shorter term
The phrase "sticky wicket" means a difficult situation. The term derives from the game of Cricket, referring to the difficulty of playing on a wet, sticky pitch.
Which phrase does not come from the Preamble to the Constitution?
Clear to white and slightly sticky.
it has a sticky handbrake switch
The phrase comes from FRENCH.
Picking flowers, do you love them or not, it NOT a phrase!
This phrase pre dates 1950
A prepositional phrase can come before a noun (or pronoun):At the party Jack played the piano.A prepositional phrase includes a noun (or pronoun):Jack played the piano at the party.A prepositional phrase can come after a noun (or pronoun):Jack played the piano at the party.A prepositional phrase can come after a verb:Jack played at the party.
come to me. lets emabrase
A common use of this phrase would be, "Where did you come from?"
the phrase hit the sack came from Germany.